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North Las Vegas doesn’t look like a place where thousands of people are struggling to survive. From a distance, it’s sun, highways, new housing developments, distribution centers, casinos glowing nearby. But underneath that polished desert image, there’s a growing group of people who simply can’t keep up. Rents rise faster than wages. Service jobs offer unpredictable hours. One medical bill or missed paycheck can push someone from barely stable to completely unhoused in weeks. On paper, around 7,900 people were counted homeless across Southern Nevada in the latest census. That number includes North Las Vegas, even though the city doesn’t publish its own separate figure. And that count happens on one single night in January. It doesn’t capture the people sleeping in cars temporarily, couch-surfing, or cycling in and out of motels when they can afford a few nights. The real number over a full year is higher. It always is. Many of the people on the streets depend on Social Security, disability payments, food assistance, or Medicaid just to survive. Those programs keep people alive, but they don’t magically create affordable housing. When the cheapest apartment costs more than a full disability check, math becomes cruel. Government aid prevents total collapse, but it rarely builds a path out. That’s the uncomfortable middle ground nobody likes to admit. Then there’s the desert itself. Summer temperatures can exceed 110 degrees. Living outside in that kind of heat isn’t just unpleasant. It’s dangerous. Cooling centers, shelters, outreach teams try to help, but resources are stretched thin. Meanwhile, new developments keep rising across the valley, and the contrast becomes harder to ignore. North Las Vegas isn’t unique. It’s a snapshot of a bigger national issue: housing costs climbing, wages lagging, safety nets stretched, and cities trying to manage a crisis that grows faster than solutions. The real question isn’t whether help exists. It’s whether there’s enough sustained commitment to make homelessness rare instead of routine.